Here goes nothing

Thanks to a post in rich text, I’ve discovered a pretty cool little plug-in that should cross post all my posts here over to my fake blog on LiveJournal. Even better, another plugin puts a comment link on the bottom of my fake blog that directs back there so I don’t have to check there and here for comments.

In other blog news, I installed Akismet which supposedly works with SpamKarma2 to further reduce the spam problem. But for some strange reason it seems to be double counting the spam. I wrote down what my SpamKarma “spams killed” count was when I started, and since then the Akismet count has been increasing at almost, but not quite, double the rate the SpamKarma2 count has been. The SpamKarma2 count delta also agrees with the number of spams I see in the review and clean-out pages that both SpamKarma2 and Akismet present. Very weird.

Speaking of blog spam, another thing I’ve noticed recently are trackbacks where some site has copied my entire blog post and surrounded it with advertising. I don’t know what they’re playing at, but every time I see one I mark it as spam and delete the trackback. I notice that other bloggers, David Megginson for instance, don’t delete them. They probably should – I can’t see these things as anything other than an attempt to confuse search engines into directing people to their site instead of yours. It’s hard to draw the line between these trackback spammers and a legitimate “Planet” site that puts your RSS feed on a page with other blogs of a similar interest group – for instance I know my blog appears on “Planet LUGOR” and “Planet Linode”, the first because I’m a member of LUGOR and the second because I’m a former customer of Linode’s virtual private servers. It’s hard to draw the line, but I know the difference when I see it and I do draw the line.

3 thoughts on “Here goes nothing”

  1. I get similar trackbacks quite frequently from sites that have done the same – copied all or most of one of my blog entries and surrounded it by others.

    The best I can guess is that this is a ploy to attract not only search engine rankings, but due to the trackbacks, increase “links-to” the site in question.

    I’m guessing after these rankings are in place the “blog” is swapped out for a splog.

    Links and trackbacks in place now point to the splog, and search engine rankings are perhaps high due to all the links to the site…and away they go.

    Every time it happens to me I spank the trackback manually in Spamkarma.

    BTW, What was that plugin for LJ? I must be missing it at WordPress.org.

  2. /me quietly mourns her chopped liver. If you’re turning off comments on your LiveJournal blog, I’d recommend using OpenID for comments for LJ users.

  3. Wow, works great, good find.

    Now, if only there was an easy way to import WP entries into LJ to catch up on history.

    I discovered that going back and editing old entries only to immediately save them again does indeed cause them to echo at LJ, but that’s not realistic for hundreds of posts.

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